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Patrick Doyle's Impressions of America (Varese CD April 16 2013)


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PATRICK DOYLE

Impressions Of America
2013 certainly seems set to be a year of exciting celebrations! We are so excited to announce our latest release by one of film music’s greatest and most successful composers ... the great Patrick Doyle!
Doyle’s film scores include such blockbusters as Brave, Harry Potter and The Goblet Of Fire, Rise of the Planet of the Apes, Thor, Bridget Jones’s Diary, Henry V and so many others! Doyle is a Scotsman who has been coming to America for many years now to bring his incredible music to Hollywood. These many trips have now inspired their own musical work and Doyle has composed a symphonic piece consisting of fifteen impressions. Patrick Doyle’s IMPRESSIONS OF AMERICA is a nostalgic look at America ... its landscapes, its traditions, and its people.
Scored for full symphony orchestra, we release Patrick Doyle’s IMPRESSIONS OF AMERICA to celebrate the composer’s 60th birthday in April of 2013.
1. Washington DC
2. Pumpkin Pie
3. Christmas In New York
4. Transcontinental Railroad
5. The Great Depression
6. Mount Rushmore
7. Prairie Sunrise
8. Winter In Alaska
9. Decaying City
10. Yosemite
11. Death Valley
12. Rushing Rapids
13. The Great Plains
14. Old Glory
15. Thanksgiving
Varese Sarabande Catalog # 302 067 194 2
Release Date: 04/16/13
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A Scotsman composing nostalgic Americana.This sounds very interesting indeed. :)

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Patrick Doyle knows that John Williams doesn't represent all of America.

John Williams hasn't written a theme for pumpkin pie yet.

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Patrick Doyle knows that John Williams doesn't represent all of America.

John Williams hasn't written a theme for pumpkin pie yet.
It's not related to trees. If if grew on trees, he would have written a pumpkin pie concerto years ago.
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  • 3 weeks later...

Beautiful cover :)

But yes, very odd that there are no credits whatsoever beyond producing.

I'd love this to have a similar sound to Brave, whose lyrical string work is just to die for.

I would not think it strange there are so scanty credits in the back cover. More space for the gorgeous cover image. :)

I assumed that the orchestra used was a studio orchestra so I think they'll receive their billing in the booklet.

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Well since the piece was composed for the National Schools Symphony Orchestra I kinda assumed they would have been the performing orchestra here.

It would make sense. And then it would also make sense to put their name on the cover, either back or front. It would have been nice publicity for the orchestra.

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Also, was it not really hard to get the funds to record an album now?

Isn't that basically why the only official release of the LOTR symphony is a live performance recorded in Switserland?

Yes they record companies have cut down on their recording expenses and often record live concert performances now. I believe the LotR Symphony was recorded that way as well.

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No orchestra credit needed. It is in fact a secret recording of Doyle singing this stuff in the shower! Voilà! Obviating the orchestra altogether!

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I just listened to this release for the first time.  It is certainly a pleasant album, with lovely orchestrations.

 

My problem with Patrick Doyle, who is a fine composer, is that he writes music that sounds like it should be carried by melody but often his melodies are just not up to snuff.

 

My favorites of his tend to be the cues where the melodies are strongest ("Harry in Winter" for example).

 

But these are just my first impressions of the album, maybe it could grow on me.

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I had such high hopes for this, being a Doyle fan and thinking the concept would right up his alley. Alas, I was massively disappointed. Lots of directionless textures, and barely a sign of his melodic finesse. I think I deleted my digital copy after having tried it 2-3 times.

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On 21/09/2017 at 3:47 PM, Disco Stu said:

My problem with Patrick Doyle, who is a fine composer, is that he writes music that sounds like it should be carried by melody but often his melodies are just not up to snuff.

 

 

It depends, though I'm not sure on what. There's stuff he seems to have been excited about (at least according to his liner notes) that sound nice but end up being rather generic because they lack a strong melody, as you say. But then there's stuff, like his early Branagh scores and recently Cinderella, that very much delivers in this regard.

 

It's true though, this isn't one of those cases.

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